Featured Developments from the Field: State and GLS Grantee Stories

The following items represent initiatives and developments from State Suicide Prevention groups and SAMHSA’s Garrett Lee Smith Suicide Prevention Grantees, and are shared as examples of what suicide prevention practitioners in the field are doing. Also included are key findings from the national cross-site evaluation of the Garrett Lee Smith Suicide Prevention program, which collects data from all State, Tribal, and Campus grant sites. SPRC does not necessarily endorse or recommend any of the programs or activities featured; instead, we recommend that planning groups use a strategic planning process to develop a comprehensive program to address their particular community needs.

Using Focus Groups to Inform Messaging

The Suicide Outreach and Support (SOS) Program at the University of West Florida used focus groups of LGBT students to help create a message and poster that would be effective with this audience. Based on the input and guidance of these focus groups, SOS created a “You Are Not Alone” poster which is part of the university’s comprehensive campus suicide prevention program. Other targeted posters and messages were created for student veterans and students suffering from depression. To view these posters and learn more about the efforts of this Garrett Lee Smith Memorial Act grantee, visit the Suicide Outreach & Support website. http://www.uwf.edu/cws/SOS.cfm. For more information on SOS, email April Glenn at aglenn@uwf.edu.

Developments from States and GLS Grantees

The From the Field archives capture the initiatives and successes of States and GLS Grantees in 2012. Some of the 2012 programs and activities featured in this archive include:

The Life Is Sacred Program in Oregon, which used data from a state-wide school survey to understand the role of risk and protective factors in suicide attempts by American Indian/Alaskan Native youth

The ASK About Suicide to Save a Life app developed in Texas that helps users recognize and respond to the warning signs of suicide

The Suicide-Proofing initiative in Rhode Island that teaches parents how to reduce the likelihood of suicide by reducing access to lethal means and paying attention to their children’s moods and behavior

Working with the Military for Mental Health

In Kentucky, the Kentucky Division of Behavioral Health, a GLS grantee, and the National Guard are working together on Operation Immersion with the goal of improving behavioral health services for members of the military and veterans. This project brought behavioral health professionals to the Wendell H. Ford Regional Training Center for a look at military culture that will help them provide more effective services to active members of the military and veterans. In addition to physical fitness training and combat simulations, participants received classroom instruction on subjects including suicide prevention, military culture, and traumatic brain injury. More information on Operation Immersion can be found on the Kentucky National Guard blog Unbridled Service.

The SPRC is supported by a grant (1 U79 SM059945) from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS). No official endorsement by SAMHSA or DHHS for the information on this web site is intended or should be inferred.